DRY
dry, teetotal
(adjective) practicing complete abstinence from alcoholic beverages; “he’s been dry for ten years”; “no thank you; I happen to be teetotal”
dry
(adjective) lacking warmth or emotional involvement; “a dry greeting”; “a dry reading of the lines”; “a dry critique”
dry
(adjective) having a large proportion of strong liquor; “a very dry martini is almost straight gin”
dry
(adjective) without a mucous or watery discharge; “a dry cough”; “that rare thing in the wintertime; a small child with a dry nose”
dry, ironic, ironical, wry
(adjective) humorously sarcastic or mocking; “dry humor”; “an ironic remark often conveys an intended meaning obliquely”; “an ironic novel”; “an ironical smile”; “with a wry Scottish wit”
dry
(adjective) (of food) eaten without a spread or sauce or other garnish; “dry toast”; “dry meat”
dry
(adjective) having no adornment or coloration; “dry facts”; “rattled off the facts in a dry mechanical manner”
dry
(adjective) unproductive especially of the expected results; “a dry run”; “a mind dry of new ideas”
dry
(adjective) used of solid substances in contrast with liquid ones; “dry weight”
dry, juiceless
(adjective) lacking interest or stimulation; dull and lifeless; “a dry book”; “a dry lecture filled with trivial details”; “dull and juiceless as only book knowledge can be when it is unrelated to...life”- John Mason Brown
dry
(adjective) (of liquor) having a low residual sugar content because of decomposition of sugar during fermentation; “a dry white burgundy”; “a dry Bordeaux”
dry
(adjective) not shedding tears; “dry sobs”; “with dry eyes”
dry
(adjective) free from liquid or moisture; lacking natural or normal moisture or depleted of water; or no longer wet; “dry land”; “dry clothes”; “a dry climate”; “dry splintery boards”; “a dry river bed”; “the paint is dry”
dry
(adjective) not producing milk; “a dry cow”
dry
(adjective) opposed to or prohibiting the production and sale of alcoholic beverages; “the dry vote led by preachers and bootleggers”; “a dry state”
dry
(adjective) lacking moisture or volatile components; “dry paint”
dry, prohibitionist
(noun) a reformer who opposes the use of intoxicating beverages
dry, dry out
(verb) remove the moisture from and make dry; “dry clothes”; “dry hair”
dry, dry out
(verb) become dry or drier; “The laundry dries in the sun”
Source: WordNet® 3.1
Etymology
Adjective
dry (comparative drier or dryer, superlative driest)
Free from or lacking moisture.
Unable to produce a liquid, as water, (petrochemistry) oil, or (farming) milk.
(masonry) Built without or lacking mortar.
(chemistry) Anhydrous: free from or lacking water in any state, regardless of the presence of other liquids.
(figurative) Athirst, eager.
Free from or lacking alcohol or alcoholic beverages.
(law) Describing an area where sales of alcoholic or strong alcoholic beverages are banned.
Free from or lacking embellishment or sweetness, particularly:
(wine & other alcoholic beverages) Low in sugar; lacking sugar; unsweetened.
(humor) Amusing without showing amusement.
Lacking interest, boring.
(fine arts) Exhibiting precise execution lacking delicate contours or soft transitions of color.
(science, somewhat pejorative) Involving computations rather than work with biological or chemical matter.
(of a sound recording) Free from applied audio effects.
Without a usual complement or consummation; impotent.
Of a bite from an animal: not containing the usual venom.
(Christianity) Of a mass, service, or rite: involving neither consecration nor communion.
Synonyms
• (free from liquid or moisture): See Thesaurus:dry
Antonyms
• (free from liquid or moisture): See Thesaurus:wet
• (abstinent from alcohol): wet
• (of a scientist or lab: doing computation): wet
Noun
dry (plural drys or dries)
The process by which something is dried.
(US) A prohibitionist (of alcoholic beverages).
(chiefly, Australia, with "the") The dry season.
(Australia) An area of waterless country.
(British, UK politics) A radical or hard-line Conservative; especially, one who supported the policies of British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s.
Antonym: wet
Verb
dry (third-person singular simple present dries, present participle drying, simple past and past participle dried)
(intransitive) To lose moisture.
(transitive) To remove moisture from.
(obsolete, intransitive) To be thirsty.
(transitive, figurative) To exhaust; to cause to run dry.
(intransitive, informal) For an actor to forget his or her lines while performing.
Anagrams
• YRD
Proper noun
Dry (plural Drys)
A surname.
Statistics
• According to the 2010 United States Census, Dry is the 12921st most common surname in the United States, belonging to 2379 individuals. Dry is most common among White (82.72%) individuals.
Anagrams
• YRD
Phrase
DRY
(software engineering) Acronym of don't repeat yourself (“software development principle aimed at reducing repetition”).
Anagrams
• YRD
Source: Wiktionary
Dry, a. [Compar. Drier; superl. Driest.] Etym: [OE. dru, druye, drie,
AS. dryge; akin to LG. dröge, D. droog, OHG. trucchan, G. trocken,
Icel. draugr a dry log. Cf. Drought, Drouth, 3d Drug.]
1. Free from moisture; having little humidity or none; arid; not wet
or moist; deficient in the natural or normal supply of moisture, as
rain or fluid of any kind; -- said especially: (a) Of the weather:
Free from rain or mist.
The weather, we agreed, was too dry for the season. Addison.
(b) Of vegetable matter: Free from juices or sap; not succulent; not
green; as, dry wood or hay.
(c) Of animals: Not giving milk; as, the cow is dry.
(d) Of persons: Thirsty; needing drink.
Give the dry fool drink. Shak
(e) Of the eyes: Not shedding tears.
Not a dry eye was to be seen in the assembly. Prescott.
(f) (Med.)
Definition: Of certain morbid conditions, in which there is entire or
comparative absence of moisture; as, dry gangrene; dry catarrh.
2. Destitute of that which interests or amuses; barren;
unembellished; jejune; plain.
These epistles will become less dry, more susceptible of ornament.
Pope.
3. Characterized by a quality somewhat severe, grave, or hard; hence,
sharp; keen; shrewd; quaint; as, a dry tone or manner; dry wit.
He was rather a dry, shrewd kind of body. W. Irving.
4. (Fine Arts)
Definition: Exhibiting a sharp, frigid preciseness of execution, or the
want of a delicate contour in form, and of easy transition in
coloring. Dry area (Arch.), a small open space reserved outside the
foundation of a building to guard it from damp.
– Dry blow. (a) (Med.) A blow which inflicts no wound, and causes
no effusion of blood. (b) A quick, sharp blow.
– Dry bone (Min.), Smithsonite, or carbonate of zinc; -- a miner's
term.
– Dry castor (Zoöl.) a kind of beaver; -- called also parchment
beaver.
– Dry cupping. (Med.) See under Cupping.
– Dry dock. See under Dock.
– Dry fat. See Dry vat (below).
– Dry light, pure unobstructed light; hence, a clear, impartial
view. Bacon.
The scientific man must keep his feelings under stern control, lest
they obtrude into his researches, and color the dry light in which
alone science desires to see its objects. J. C. Shairp.
– Dry masonry. See Masonry.
– Dry measure, a system of measures of volume for dry or coarse
articles, by the bushel, peck, etc.
– Dry pile (Physics), a form of the Voltaic pile, constructed
without the use of a liquid, affording a feeble current, and chiefly
useful in the construction of electroscopes of great delicacy; --
called also Zamboni's , from the names of the two earliest
constructors of it.
– Dry pipe (Steam Engine), a pipe which conducts dry steam from a
boiler.
– Dry plate (Photog.), a glass plate having a dry coating sensitive
to light, upon which photographic negatives or pictures can be made,
without moistening.
– Dry-plate process, the process of photographing with dry plates.
– Dry point. (Fine Arts) (a) An engraving made with the needle
instead of the burin, in which the work is done nearly as in etching,
but is finished without the use acid. (b) A print from such an
engraving, usually upon paper. (c) Hence: The needle with which such
an engraving is made.
– Dry rent (Eng. Law), a rent reserved by deed, without a clause of
distress. Bouvier.
– Dry rot, a decay of timber, reducing its fibers to the condition
of a dry powdery dust, often accompanied by the presence of a
peculiar fungus (Merulius lacrymans), which is sometimes considered
the cause of the decay; but it is more probable that the real cause
is the decomposition of the wood itself. D. C. Eaton. Called also sap
rot, and, in the United States, powder post. Hebert.
– Dry stove, a hothouse adapted to preserving the plants of arid
climates. Brande & C.
– Dry vat, a vat, basket, or other receptacle for dry articles.
– Dry wine, that in which the saccharine matter and fermentation
were so exactly balanced, that they have wholly neutralized each
other, and no sweetness is perceptible; -- opposed to sweet wine, in
which the saccharine matter is in excess.
Dry, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Dried; p. pr. & vb. n. Drying.] Etym: [AS.
drygan; cf. drugian to grow dry. See Dry, a.]
Definition: To make dry; to free from water, or from moisture of any kind,
and by any means; to exsiccate; as, to dry the eyes; to dry one's
tears; the wind dries the earth; to dry a wet cloth; to dry hay. To
dry up. (a) To scorch or parch with thirst; to deprive utterly of
water; to consume.
Their honorable men are famished, and their multitude dried up with
thirst. Is. v. 13.
The water of the sea, which formerly covered it, was in time exhaled
and dried up by the sun. Woodward.
(b) To make to cease, as a stream of talk.
Their sources of revenue were dried up. Jowett (Thucyd. )
– To dry, or dry up, a cow, to cause a cow to cease secreting milk.
Tylor.
Dry, v. i.
1. To grow dry; to become free from wetness, moisture, or juice; as,
the road dries rapidly.
2. To evaporate wholly; to be exhaled; -- said of moisture, or a
liquid; -- sometimes with up; as, the stream dries, or dries up.
3. To shrivel or wither; to lose vitality.
And his hand, which he put forth against him, dried up, so that he
could not pull it in again to him. I Kings xiii. 4.
Source: Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary 1913 Edition